On April 9, 2026, the Saudi Riyal (SAR) is exchanging at Rs74.42 against the Pakistani Rupee (PKR) in Karachi’s open market, with the selling rate hovering near Rs74.99. This currency pair has remained confined within an exceptionally tight and low-volatility band since early January 2026, marking over twelve weeks of remarkably stable pricing.
Notably, the current rate stays well below the mid-2025 peak of Rs76.03 recorded in July and is close to the softer levels last seen consistently in late October 2025. The Riyal continues to be the primary source of monthly income for millions of Pakistani families, as workers employed in Saudi Arabia’s construction, healthcare, hospitality, and domestic sectors sustain a steady remittance flow.
Saudi Arabia remains the leading country for remittances to Pakistan, contributing $913.3 million in May 2025 alone—the largest inflow from any single country. From July 2024 through May 2025, cumulative remittances reached $34.9 billion, reflecting a robust 28.8% increase year-on-year. At today’s exchange rate, every 1,000 Riyals sent home converts to Rs74,420, representing a gradual but persistent decline compared to earlier 2025 levels.
While these remittances continue to support essential household expenses such as school fees, medical care, groceries, and utilities, the prolonged depreciation is quietly intensifying financial pressure on families reliant on these funds amid ongoing inflationary challenges.
In economic terms, the Riyal trading around Rs74.40 to Rs74.50 creates mixed effects. Families receiving remittances experience a slow erosion of their real purchasing power. Conversely, importers of Saudi crude oil, refined products, and petrochemicals benefit from reduced costs in rupee terms, providing modest relief to Pakistan’s trade balance. Additionally, foreign exchange reserves, which stood above $11 billion in late 2024, continue to be bolstered by these inflows, aiding the State Bank of Pakistan in managing inflation and external debt obligations.
The relatively weaker Rupee also helps maintain the competitiveness of Pakistani exports—including rice, textiles, leather goods, surgical instruments, and fresh produce—in global markets.
For context, the Saudi Riyal is subdivided into 100 halala and is firmly pegged to the US dollar at approximately 3.75 SAR per USD, with the Saudi Arabian Monetary Authority (SAMA) ensuring its stability. The Pakistani Rupee, symbolized as ₨, operates under a managed float system overseen by the State Bank of Pakistan, influenced by inflation, trade balances, and critically, remittance volumes.
This prolonged period of low volatility in the SAR to PKR exchange rate is one of the longest in recent memory. With steady outflows of overseas Pakistani workers and seasonal factors such as Hajj and Umrah travel and fiscal year-end bonuses continuing to support remittances, this corridor remains a vital economic lifeline for Pakistan.
In a significant development, any decisive movement beyond this narrow range would likely depend on substantial changes in global dollar strength, oil prices, or Pakistan’s domestic foreign exchange reserves. For now, the Riyal at Rs74.42 stands as a quiet yet crucial pillar supporting millions of households, even as incremental declines are increasingly felt.
